Quail Decoys, Kavirokdo. the Birds of Kenya and Uganda

Quail Decoys, Kavirokdo. the Birds of Kenya and Uganda

[,hoto: CAPT. DLENCOWE. QUAIL DECOYS, KAVIROKDO. THE BIRDS OF KENYA AND UGANDA. PARTIV. by V. G. L. VANSOMEREN,M.B.O.U.,BTC. Part four of the .erie. on the Bird. of Kenya and Uganda complete. the Francolin and Quail. We do not claim that the note •• 0 far published are complete, sinoe they are based almost entirely On the observation. and reoords of one individual; we therefore take this opportunity of 8uggesting to members that if they have reoords or notes oonneoted with the birds dealt with in the series, these should be oommunicated to the Editor and made available to fellow members. PHASIANIDA.E. GENUS-PTILOPACHU8. Ptllopachu8 petrosu8 ftorentlae, Og. Grant. Kenya Rock Bantam .. P.P. KENIENSIS,Mearns, Syn. Ref. Og.-Grant, B.B.O.C., lxxiii., 1900. Type locality, Gessema, Northern Frontier. Distribution: Rocky hills N.W. Northern Guasso Nyiro, Matthew's Range, west to Ngobotok and Suk; Rudolf and Moroto to Kakamari in Karamojo. DESCRIPTION:MALEADULT. Head and neck brown, each feather with a .dark shaft streak, greyish white margins inwardly accentuated with dark brown. The feathers of the supercilium and forehead, narrow and pointed. A large bare red patch surrounds the eye. Earcoverts uniform brownish. Feathers of lower neck and chest lighter ochreous-brown with wide white margins and distinct shaft streaks and sub-marginal line. The sub-marginal black tends to invade the marginal white in the feathers of the breast. Mantle, scapulars, coverts, and rump, blackish brown vermiculated marginally with whitish and centrally with ochreous and black. Upper tail-coverts similar but vermicula• tions much finer. Outer webs of primaries and secondaries blackish• brown vermiculated with lighter brown; rectrices likewise vermiculated. 197 Centre of breast uniform buff; sides of breast and flanks brownish buff with irregular marginal bars of white and blackish, and with central chestnut and black shaft-streaks. Abdomen blackish-brown with ill-defined greyish-buff barring. Under tail-coverts blackish• brown with fine lighter brown vermiculations towards ends. Thighs greyish-brown with black and buffy barring. Base of bill, dull crimson, shading to horn-yellow at tip of mandibles. Legs dull coral red, or pink, toes darker. Iris ochreous-brown. FEMALE: Very like the male but smaller and with less brownish-chestnut on the flanks. JUVENILE: The half-grown young is more heavily barred on the flanks, breast, and mantle, and f-hows only a trace of the buff breast patch. HABITS: This curious Francolin which is so extraordinarily like a •• Bantam " fowl is, as its name implies, an inhabitant of the rocky mountains and Kopjes of the drier parts of Kenya and Uganda. Rough boulder-strewn, bush-covered hillsides form its principal habitat, and in such a place it is difficult to procure. It is loth to take flight-instead it· runs and scrambles from rock to rock, or dodges in and out of the boulders with such speed that a •• snap• shot " is the only possible chance of securing the bird. My head collector reports that stalking and ~. lying-up" offer the best chance of getting in touch with this bird. The agility of the Rock-Bantam is remarkable-they think nothing of scaling a rock• face which is almost perpendicular. When excited, the bird carries its tail in a vertical position, with feathers somewhat compressed, and with the long coverts of rump and tail shed to either side. In this attitude the bird is like a cock Bantam. The call is a whistling wee-hi-u. One meets with these birds in pairs or small coveys of six to eight, and in favoured localities there may be more than one covey on the hillside. We have not taken the eggs, but Admiral Lynes describes those of the race emini, as •• pale stone-colour" with 8 matt surface, laid in a sh!!!llowdepression at the base of 8 tree or stone; well concealed. The food consists of green shoots, seeds, and insects in their larval form. Ptllopachus petrosu8 emlni, Neum. Emin's Rock-Bantam. Ref. Neum. Type locality, Fadiloek, Nile Provo Distribution: Uganda, north-western area, Nile Province. 198 DESCRIPTION: MALE ADULT. Differs from the race flOTentiae, in being less dark brown above, and with finer black bars on the flanks. The centre of the feathers on the mantle and back are chestnut; while the flanks have wide chestnut shaft~strell.ks. FEMALE: Very like the male but smaller, and with less chestnut on the flanks. JUVENILE: I am unacquainted with the young, neither does there appear to be a description of it. HABITS: As for the previous race. GENUS COTURNIX. Coturnlx cotumlx coturnlx, Linn. Common, or European Quail. Ref. Linn. Syst, Nat., 1758. Type locality, Sweden. Distribution: A winter migrant to Uganda and Kenya. DESCRIPTION: MALE ADULT. Forehead and crown blackish-brown, each feather with wide buffy brown tips. A buff line runs down the centre of the crown to the naps where it expands and is broken up. Lores and supercilium white or buffy white, the supercilliary line extending to the sides of the nape. A brown line extends from just above the gape, below the eye through the lower part of the earcoverts, then down the side of the neck. Chin and throat white or buff, the latter with a wide central black. wedge-shaped mark, base downwards, from the lateral aspect of which the black extends upwards in a curving line to the ear-coverts; thus dividing the white of the throat. Back and sides of the neck rufous-brown, with black blotches and white shaft-streaks. Exposed portions of feathers of the upper side blackish-brown, with rufescent or brown-buff bars and tips, finely vermiculated with greyish; centre of feathers of mantle, back, scapulars and upper tail-coverts with sharp-pointed buff shaft-streaks outlined with black; those on the mantle narrow .. Wing-coverts olive-brown with buff bars and whitish shafts; lesser coverts olive-brown with buff tips. Primaries and outer secondaries tipped and barred with buff; inner secondaries with black and buff bars extending across both webs. Chest and upper breast orange ochreous, with white or buff shaftstreaks and tips. Sides of breast and flanks buff with wide 199 whitish-buff shaft-streak outlined with b~ck and chestnut; margins tail-coverts buff. Wings 100-115 mm. FDULE: Above as in the male; throat without the central black area but black lateral lines sometimes present, often reduced to a few black spots. Chest buff, with narrow white shafts, and some blackish blotches; rest of underside as in the male, but with slight barring on the breast. Flanks not so decidedly coloured and with rather more distinct black marks. Bill greyish brown, legs and toes yellowish• pink; Iris light brown. JUVENILE: Very like the female, but stripes on the back much narrower, and the underside has a more mottled appearance. HABITS: The European Quail has seldom been recorded from Kenya or Uganda. We have taken them in parts of Busoga, and Stoneham states •• they are common " during the winter months in the Mtama. fields near Kitgum, Nile Province. In Kenya we obtained specimens from the Athi Plains, Loita, and Serengeti, Kisumu area, at Shimoni on the coast, and again on the Juba River. RecorQs shew them to be here in November and to remain till March. Grasslands and cultivations are the haunt of this bird. They are close squatters and are flushed with great difficulty; this characteristic no doubt accounts for the fact that the species has seldom been taken. During a visit to Kavirondo I came across a set of Quail snares and " call birds," in baskets. The birds were calling lustily, but there was a peculiarity in some of the calls which attracted my attention. I got the boy in charge to lower the baskets, and in three out of twelve, were European Quail, two males and a female. I sent for the owner and questioned him about the birds; he knew they were different from the rest, being larger and paler, but what pleased him most was, " their call attracted the wild birds better." They had been in captivity two years I The European Quail has two calls, a soft " pew-pew" uttered by both sexes when feeding; and the call of the male which is somewhat like •• wet-twi-twit." The species does not breed in either Kenya or Uganda. The food consists largely of seeds and fresh vegetable matter, but insects a.re also eagerly sought for. 200 Cotumlx ootumlx afrlcana, Temm. and Schl. African or Cape Quail. Ref. Temm. and Schl. F. Jap., 1850. Type locality, South Africa, Cape. Distribution: In suitable localities throughout Kenya and Uganda. DESCRIPTION:Very like the European bird but darker. MALE, ADULT: Forehead and crown to nape, black, with wide rusty brown tips. A white or buffy line runs down the centre of the crown to the nape where it widens out into the neck hackles; there is also a narrow white sub-marginal line to the crown. Supercilium white or buffy extending from the nostrils over the eye and down the neck band. Loral spot blackish, surmounted by rusty brown or chestnut, which colour extends over the cheeks, side of head, chin, and throat, to the upper breast. The ear-coverts are dark-brown or blackish. A bla.ckish line starts just posterior to the eye, passes through the ear-coverts and then divides into two, the upper branch extending down the neck, the other encircles the sides of the throat. The centre of the throat is ornamented with a wide anchor-shaped black patch, the arms of which pass upwards in a curve to below the ear-ooverts.

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